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Lesson Plans in an Iowa Garden

Working through 30 years of summer breaks and then retirement, two Iowa teachers molded an empty backyard into an A+ landscape. Strolling through their gardens offers lessons in creating a great yard with a limited budget and lots of patience.

Planting and dreaming

In 1977, a close call with a push mower on their steep lot led Jim and Mary Lippold to their first landscaping decision. They tamed the slope with steps and terraced retaining walls made from railroad ties. The Lippolds spent the next several years planting Midwest perennial flower beds, shrubs and trees.

Buying the adjacent partially flat/partially hilly half-lot inspired them to dream of more. Today, with more flower and foliage plantings, and the addition of flagstone paths and patios, the Lippolds have gradually reduced the lawn area on their 165x100-foot lot to a point that makes Jim’s mowing job quick, flat and safe. Click ahead for more photos of this garden.

Taming the slope

After a second riding mower incident convinced them they needed professional help, the Lippolds turned to local landscapers. One sketched out a master plan to replace ties with stone and integrate the new space, and Jim built a clapboard garden shed as its centerpiece. Additions of boxwood hedges, native grasses and a pond have given the yard an eclectic style.

Here, a canopy of trees shades stone terraces filled with hostas and ferns flanking the stairway.

A natural for water

Colonial inspiration

A 1992 trip to Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia, inspired this circular garden of ‘Green Mountain’ boxwood in front of the garden shed. Thanks to the hedges’ dense foliage and slow growth (bushes only reach about 3 feet when mature), Jim can easily keep them trimmed into compact formal shapes.